Executive Summary:
oWe decided to create this point-of-view after seeing many abstract presentations and esoteric concepts on Digital Oilfield, IoT, Big Data and Analytics.
oThis is our attempt to bring a practical implementation view to IoT by combining Digital Oilfield and IoT.
oHere, we also envisage sharing our IoT experience and lessons learnt in implementing Digital Oilfield solutions around IoT.
oThe following comprise our fundamental business case for Finance:
oPRODUCTION FORECAST
oFAULT COMPARTMENTS
oWELL LOCATION OPTIMIZATION
Be a part of the modern world by integrating digital technologies in the Oil & Gas operations. It will not only keep you digitally connected but also reduce the cost and risk involved in day-to-day industry activities. Download our free copy of whitepaper: https://www.bluemailmedia.com/oil-gas-a-definitive-path-towards-digitalization.php
Artificial Intelligence Application in Oil and GasSparkCognition
Visit http://sparkcognition.com for more information.
To access and listen to the on-demand version of the webinar, go here:
http://sparkcognition.com/ai-oil-and-gas-webinar-video/
Learn how Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning are being effectively applied in Oil & Gas right now, how they will become even more prevalent, and how they can impact your bottom line and transform your business.
We'll cover:
• Fundamentals of Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning
• Understanding of why Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning are revolutionary in how they can help the Oil & Gas industry. This technology is already being used to prevent downhole tool failures or events like stuck pipes, pinpointing the ideal drilling locations during exploration and discovery, predicting pipeline pump failures, identify frack truck pump failures, etc.
• Real world examples of how other clients are using AI/ML today
Be a part of the modern world by integrating digital technologies in the Oil & Gas operations. It will not only keep you digitally connected but also reduce the cost and risk involved in day-to-day industry activities. Download our free copy of whitepaper: https://www.bluemailmedia.com/oil-gas-a-definitive-path-towards-digitalization.php
Artificial Intelligence Application in Oil and GasSparkCognition
Visit http://sparkcognition.com for more information.
To access and listen to the on-demand version of the webinar, go here:
http://sparkcognition.com/ai-oil-and-gas-webinar-video/
Learn how Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning are being effectively applied in Oil & Gas right now, how they will become even more prevalent, and how they can impact your bottom line and transform your business.
We'll cover:
• Fundamentals of Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning
• Understanding of why Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning are revolutionary in how they can help the Oil & Gas industry. This technology is already being used to prevent downhole tool failures or events like stuck pipes, pinpointing the ideal drilling locations during exploration and discovery, predicting pipeline pump failures, identify frack truck pump failures, etc.
• Real world examples of how other clients are using AI/ML today
Introduction to Project Economics in Oil and Gas Exploration and Production (Upstream) Industry, including basic project economics method and example of calculation.
Oil 101 - A Free Introduction to Oil and Gas
Introduction to Drilling
Today we’re going to talk about the Drilling function of Upstream. If you missed our previous podcasts on Upstream Fundamentals and Exploration, be sure to go check them out. We’ll put the relevant links in the program notes.
In this drilling overview we touch on the wildcat well and current drilling capabilities, offer more insight into the role of oilfield services, and give some historical perspective on this segment of upstream oil and gas.
Drilling Details
As we discussed in the Exploration podcast, the first step in adding value is to locating the oil and gas reservoirs that are often far below the surface, and in deeper offshore prospects.
Even with the latest seismic technology and computer modeling, many characteristics of a prospect remain unknown until an exploratory or “wildcat” well is drilled. Repeating from that podcast, “you can’t find oil if you don’t drill wells.”
Oil 101: Introduction to Oil and Gas - UpstreamEKT Interactive
Oil 101: Introduction to Oil and Gas - Upstream
What is Upstream? This Midstream content is derived from our Oil 101 Upstream ebook and can be found in our oil and gas learning community.
This Upstream module includes the following sections (use the links below for quick access):
-Introduction to Upstream
-Upstream Business Characteristics
-Oilfield Services
-Reserves – Formation and Importance
-Production – The First Step in Adding Value
-The Unconventional Future of Upstream
Upstream
What is Upstream? Most oil and gas companies’ business structures are segmented and organized according to business segment, assets, or function.
The upstream segment of the business is also known as the exploration and production (E&P) sector because it encompasses activities related to searching for, recovering and producing crude oil and natural gas.
The upstream segment is all about wells: where to locate them; how deep and how far to drill them; and how to design, construct, operate and manage them to deliver the greatest possible return on investment with the lightest, safest and smallest operational footprint.
Exploration
The exploration sector involves obtaining a lease and permission to drill from the owners of onshore or offshore acreage thought to contain oil or gas, and conducting necessary geological and geophysical (G&G) surveys required to explore for (and hopefully find) economic accumulations of oil or gas.
Drilling
There is always uncertainty in the geological and geophysical survey results. The only way to be sure that a prospect is favorable is to drill an exploratory well. Drilling is physically creating the “borehole” in the ground that will eventually become an oil or gas well. This work is done by rig contractors and service companies in the Oilfield Services business sector.
Production
The production sector of the upstream segment maximizes recovery of petroleum from subsurface reservoirs.
Introduction to oil and gas exploration and processingJohn Kingsley
This is a comprehensive presentation designed to give an overview and to introduce oil & gas operations.
Following are the contents of the presentation :
a) How Oil & Gas were formed ?
b) How are Oil and Gas deposits located ?
c) Economics of Exploration operations.
d) Definition of Oil Reserves.
e) Drilling & Production Process - How are they safely and efficiently extracted for onward processing without creating detrimental environmental impacts ?
f) History of “Off-shore Oil & Gas Exploration”.
g) Different types of “Off-shore Production facilities”.
h) Characteristics of Crude oil.
i) Oil & Gas Industry – Overall Block diagram.
j) Separation of Oil, Gas and Water.
k) Gas treatment and Export.
l) Oil treatment and Export.
m) Water treatment and disposal.
n) Pipeline transportation basics.
Know more about iFluids Engineering --> visit www.iFluids.com
Artificial Intelligence has caught the attention of the oil and gas industry. This presentation sets out 4 use cases that are live in oil and gas as of October 2017. The speaker notes include specific solution names and vendors, including Stream Systems, Veerum, Osprey Analytics and IBM.
IIoT + Predictive Analytics: Solving for Disruption in Oil & Gas and Energy &...DataWorks Summit
The electric grid has evolved from linear generation and delivery to a complex mix of renewables, prosumer-generated electricity, and electric vehicles (EVs). Smart meters are generating loads of data. As a result, traditional forecasting models and technologies can no longer adequately predict supply and demand. Extreme weather, an aging infrastructure, and the burgeoning worldwide population are also contributing to increased outage frequency.
In oil and gas, commodity pricing pressures, resulting workforce reductions, and the need to reduce failures, automate workflows, and increase operational efficiencies are driving operators to shift analytics initiatives to advanced data-driven applications to complement physics-based tools.
While sensored equipment and legacy surveillance applications are generating massive amounts of data, just 2% is understood and being leveraged. Operationalizing it along with external datasets enables a shift from time-based to condition-based maintenance, better forecasting and dramatic reductions in unplanned downtime.
The session includes plenty of real-world anecdotes. For example, how an electric power holding company reduced the time it took to investigate energy theft from six months to less than one hour, producing theft leads in minutes and an expected multi-million dollar ROI. How a global offshore contract drilling services provider implemented an open source IIoT solution across its fleet of assets in less than a year, enabling remote monitoring, predictive analytics and maintenance.
Key takeaways:
• How are new processes for data collection, storage and democratization making it accessible and usable at scale?
• Beyond time series data, what other data types are important to assess?
• What advantage are open source technologies providing to enterprises deploying IIoT?
• Why is collaboration important across industrial verticals to increase IIoT open source adoption?
Speaker
Kenneth Smith, General Manager, Energy, Hortonworks
Oil 101: Introduction to Oil and Gas - DownstreamEKT Interactive
Oil 101: Introduction to Oil and Gas
What is Downstream?
This Downstream module includes the following sections:
-Downstream Business Characteristics
-Refining – Products and Participants
-Consumption – The Final Step in Adding Value
-Marketing and Retail
Downstream
Processing, transporting and selling refined products made from crude oil is the business of the downstream segment of the oil and gas industry.
Key downstream business sectors include:
-Oil Refining
-Supply and Trading
-Product Marketing and Retail
The downstream industry provides thousands of products to end-user customers around the globe.
Many products are familiar such as gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, heating oil and asphalt for roads. Others are not as familiar such as lubricants, synthetic rubber, plastics, fertilizers and pesticides.
The downstream segment is a margin business. Margin is defined as the difference between the price realized for the products produced from the crude oil and the cost of the crude delivered to the refinery.
Although the price of crude sets the absolute level of product prices, it may or may not affect refining or marketing margins. Downstream margins tend to be reduced, or squeezed, when crude price increases often cannot be recovered in the marketplace. On the other hand, margins tend to hold, or even increase, when crude prices drop and the marketplace more slowly adjusts to these lower crude prices.
The downstream segment includes complex and diverse activities including manufacturing, petrochemical refining, distribution, and retail.
A global perspective is important because of the global nature of the energy supply chain as well as the impact of supply and demand on both feedstock and product prices.
Integrated Oil Field Development Plan - FDP. Criteria, strategy and process f...Giuseppe Moricca
Integrated Oil Field Development Plan - FDP.
The integrated oil field development plan describes process, explores options, and targets, aimed at the optimal oil and gas field development in line with the oil company strategy.
The spine in the process is the specialist teams who navigate, manage and integrate the subsurface and surface complexities, uncertainties and opportunities into a single development plan, maximizing the overall field recovery and asset value.
Data as the New Oil: Producing Value in the Oil and Gas IndustryVMware Tanzu
Oil and gas exploration and production activities generate large amounts of data from sensors, logistics, business operations and more. Given the data volume, variety and velocity, gaining actionable and relevant insights from the data is challenging. Learn about these challenges and how to address them by leveraging big data technologies in this webinar.
During the webinar we will dive deep into approaches for predicting drilling equipment function and failure, a key step towards zero unplanned downtime. In the process of drilling wells, non-productive time due to drilling equipment failure can be expensive. We will highlight how the Pivotal Data Labs team uses big data technologies to build models for predicting drilling equipment function and failure. Models such as these can be used to build essential early warning systems to reduce costs and minimize unplanned downtime.
Panelist:
Rashmi Raghu, Senior Data Scientist, Pivotal
Hosted by:
Tim Matteson, Co-Founder -- Data Science Central
Video replay is available to watch here: http://youtu.be/dhT-tjHCr9E
Introduction-Alpha….. Betical PRINCIPLES of Petroleum Geology; Classification of fossil fuels as hydrocarbon resources and hydrocarbon producing resources; Oil/Gas Generation and Diagenesis; Types of Oil & Natural Gas Plays; Occurrence of Oil and Gas; umbrella terms given to petroleum: Conventional oil and Unconventional oil; Associated Gas and Non-associated Gas; In Situ Oil and Gas Resources versus Supply; Natural Gas Resource and Quality Types; Natural GAS; Oil and Gas Process; Oil/Gas Field Life Cycle; Oil Field Pyramid ; Giant Oil Field
Oil 101 - A Free Introduction to Oil and Gas
What is Midstream Oil and Gas?
As its name implies, the midstream oil and gas segment encompasses facilities and processes that sit between the upstream and downstream segments. Activities can include processing, storage and transportation of crude oil and natural gas.
In most cases, oil and gas reserves are not located in the same geographic location as refining assets and major consumption regions.
Transportation is a big part of midstream activities and can include using pipelines, trucking fleets, tanker ships, and rail cars.
Webinar: How To Manage The Event Technology Ecosystem - Breakthroughs In Inte...Builtio
Meeting and event planners work with many technology platforms that all promise to optimize their resources. But many of these tools only solve one problem and rarely integrate with other platforms. As a result, planners are often left to manage event data between systems manually, cancelling out any time-saving automation that was done in the first place.
Major obstacles have traditionally precluded planners from fully integrating their systems – time, money, access to expertise, complicated processes and lack of support from technology providers and IT departments. In this webinar, we'll walk you through how to connect all of your tools by yourself with a simple integration solution, an ‘integration Platform-as-a-Service’ (iPaaS). iPaaS solutions like Built.io Flow make it easier, more affordable, and faster to integrate, enabling planners to pursue opportunities to do so much more with their skills and talents.
Arne Rossmann outlines why the Business Data Lake works and which Services the Business Data Lake should provide. Organizations can use the Business Data Lake concept best when they standardize, industrialize and innovate.
Presented by Arne Rossman, Capgemini Germany, at the OOP Conference, 31 January 2017
Introduction to Project Economics in Oil and Gas Exploration and Production (Upstream) Industry, including basic project economics method and example of calculation.
Oil 101 - A Free Introduction to Oil and Gas
Introduction to Drilling
Today we’re going to talk about the Drilling function of Upstream. If you missed our previous podcasts on Upstream Fundamentals and Exploration, be sure to go check them out. We’ll put the relevant links in the program notes.
In this drilling overview we touch on the wildcat well and current drilling capabilities, offer more insight into the role of oilfield services, and give some historical perspective on this segment of upstream oil and gas.
Drilling Details
As we discussed in the Exploration podcast, the first step in adding value is to locating the oil and gas reservoirs that are often far below the surface, and in deeper offshore prospects.
Even with the latest seismic technology and computer modeling, many characteristics of a prospect remain unknown until an exploratory or “wildcat” well is drilled. Repeating from that podcast, “you can’t find oil if you don’t drill wells.”
Oil 101: Introduction to Oil and Gas - UpstreamEKT Interactive
Oil 101: Introduction to Oil and Gas - Upstream
What is Upstream? This Midstream content is derived from our Oil 101 Upstream ebook and can be found in our oil and gas learning community.
This Upstream module includes the following sections (use the links below for quick access):
-Introduction to Upstream
-Upstream Business Characteristics
-Oilfield Services
-Reserves – Formation and Importance
-Production – The First Step in Adding Value
-The Unconventional Future of Upstream
Upstream
What is Upstream? Most oil and gas companies’ business structures are segmented and organized according to business segment, assets, or function.
The upstream segment of the business is also known as the exploration and production (E&P) sector because it encompasses activities related to searching for, recovering and producing crude oil and natural gas.
The upstream segment is all about wells: where to locate them; how deep and how far to drill them; and how to design, construct, operate and manage them to deliver the greatest possible return on investment with the lightest, safest and smallest operational footprint.
Exploration
The exploration sector involves obtaining a lease and permission to drill from the owners of onshore or offshore acreage thought to contain oil or gas, and conducting necessary geological and geophysical (G&G) surveys required to explore for (and hopefully find) economic accumulations of oil or gas.
Drilling
There is always uncertainty in the geological and geophysical survey results. The only way to be sure that a prospect is favorable is to drill an exploratory well. Drilling is physically creating the “borehole” in the ground that will eventually become an oil or gas well. This work is done by rig contractors and service companies in the Oilfield Services business sector.
Production
The production sector of the upstream segment maximizes recovery of petroleum from subsurface reservoirs.
Introduction to oil and gas exploration and processingJohn Kingsley
This is a comprehensive presentation designed to give an overview and to introduce oil & gas operations.
Following are the contents of the presentation :
a) How Oil & Gas were formed ?
b) How are Oil and Gas deposits located ?
c) Economics of Exploration operations.
d) Definition of Oil Reserves.
e) Drilling & Production Process - How are they safely and efficiently extracted for onward processing without creating detrimental environmental impacts ?
f) History of “Off-shore Oil & Gas Exploration”.
g) Different types of “Off-shore Production facilities”.
h) Characteristics of Crude oil.
i) Oil & Gas Industry – Overall Block diagram.
j) Separation of Oil, Gas and Water.
k) Gas treatment and Export.
l) Oil treatment and Export.
m) Water treatment and disposal.
n) Pipeline transportation basics.
Know more about iFluids Engineering --> visit www.iFluids.com
Artificial Intelligence has caught the attention of the oil and gas industry. This presentation sets out 4 use cases that are live in oil and gas as of October 2017. The speaker notes include specific solution names and vendors, including Stream Systems, Veerum, Osprey Analytics and IBM.
IIoT + Predictive Analytics: Solving for Disruption in Oil & Gas and Energy &...DataWorks Summit
The electric grid has evolved from linear generation and delivery to a complex mix of renewables, prosumer-generated electricity, and electric vehicles (EVs). Smart meters are generating loads of data. As a result, traditional forecasting models and technologies can no longer adequately predict supply and demand. Extreme weather, an aging infrastructure, and the burgeoning worldwide population are also contributing to increased outage frequency.
In oil and gas, commodity pricing pressures, resulting workforce reductions, and the need to reduce failures, automate workflows, and increase operational efficiencies are driving operators to shift analytics initiatives to advanced data-driven applications to complement physics-based tools.
While sensored equipment and legacy surveillance applications are generating massive amounts of data, just 2% is understood and being leveraged. Operationalizing it along with external datasets enables a shift from time-based to condition-based maintenance, better forecasting and dramatic reductions in unplanned downtime.
The session includes plenty of real-world anecdotes. For example, how an electric power holding company reduced the time it took to investigate energy theft from six months to less than one hour, producing theft leads in minutes and an expected multi-million dollar ROI. How a global offshore contract drilling services provider implemented an open source IIoT solution across its fleet of assets in less than a year, enabling remote monitoring, predictive analytics and maintenance.
Key takeaways:
• How are new processes for data collection, storage and democratization making it accessible and usable at scale?
• Beyond time series data, what other data types are important to assess?
• What advantage are open source technologies providing to enterprises deploying IIoT?
• Why is collaboration important across industrial verticals to increase IIoT open source adoption?
Speaker
Kenneth Smith, General Manager, Energy, Hortonworks
Oil 101: Introduction to Oil and Gas - DownstreamEKT Interactive
Oil 101: Introduction to Oil and Gas
What is Downstream?
This Downstream module includes the following sections:
-Downstream Business Characteristics
-Refining – Products and Participants
-Consumption – The Final Step in Adding Value
-Marketing and Retail
Downstream
Processing, transporting and selling refined products made from crude oil is the business of the downstream segment of the oil and gas industry.
Key downstream business sectors include:
-Oil Refining
-Supply and Trading
-Product Marketing and Retail
The downstream industry provides thousands of products to end-user customers around the globe.
Many products are familiar such as gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, heating oil and asphalt for roads. Others are not as familiar such as lubricants, synthetic rubber, plastics, fertilizers and pesticides.
The downstream segment is a margin business. Margin is defined as the difference between the price realized for the products produced from the crude oil and the cost of the crude delivered to the refinery.
Although the price of crude sets the absolute level of product prices, it may or may not affect refining or marketing margins. Downstream margins tend to be reduced, or squeezed, when crude price increases often cannot be recovered in the marketplace. On the other hand, margins tend to hold, or even increase, when crude prices drop and the marketplace more slowly adjusts to these lower crude prices.
The downstream segment includes complex and diverse activities including manufacturing, petrochemical refining, distribution, and retail.
A global perspective is important because of the global nature of the energy supply chain as well as the impact of supply and demand on both feedstock and product prices.
Integrated Oil Field Development Plan - FDP. Criteria, strategy and process f...Giuseppe Moricca
Integrated Oil Field Development Plan - FDP.
The integrated oil field development plan describes process, explores options, and targets, aimed at the optimal oil and gas field development in line with the oil company strategy.
The spine in the process is the specialist teams who navigate, manage and integrate the subsurface and surface complexities, uncertainties and opportunities into a single development plan, maximizing the overall field recovery and asset value.
Data as the New Oil: Producing Value in the Oil and Gas IndustryVMware Tanzu
Oil and gas exploration and production activities generate large amounts of data from sensors, logistics, business operations and more. Given the data volume, variety and velocity, gaining actionable and relevant insights from the data is challenging. Learn about these challenges and how to address them by leveraging big data technologies in this webinar.
During the webinar we will dive deep into approaches for predicting drilling equipment function and failure, a key step towards zero unplanned downtime. In the process of drilling wells, non-productive time due to drilling equipment failure can be expensive. We will highlight how the Pivotal Data Labs team uses big data technologies to build models for predicting drilling equipment function and failure. Models such as these can be used to build essential early warning systems to reduce costs and minimize unplanned downtime.
Panelist:
Rashmi Raghu, Senior Data Scientist, Pivotal
Hosted by:
Tim Matteson, Co-Founder -- Data Science Central
Video replay is available to watch here: http://youtu.be/dhT-tjHCr9E
Introduction-Alpha….. Betical PRINCIPLES of Petroleum Geology; Classification of fossil fuels as hydrocarbon resources and hydrocarbon producing resources; Oil/Gas Generation and Diagenesis; Types of Oil & Natural Gas Plays; Occurrence of Oil and Gas; umbrella terms given to petroleum: Conventional oil and Unconventional oil; Associated Gas and Non-associated Gas; In Situ Oil and Gas Resources versus Supply; Natural Gas Resource and Quality Types; Natural GAS; Oil and Gas Process; Oil/Gas Field Life Cycle; Oil Field Pyramid ; Giant Oil Field
Oil 101 - A Free Introduction to Oil and Gas
What is Midstream Oil and Gas?
As its name implies, the midstream oil and gas segment encompasses facilities and processes that sit between the upstream and downstream segments. Activities can include processing, storage and transportation of crude oil and natural gas.
In most cases, oil and gas reserves are not located in the same geographic location as refining assets and major consumption regions.
Transportation is a big part of midstream activities and can include using pipelines, trucking fleets, tanker ships, and rail cars.
Webinar: How To Manage The Event Technology Ecosystem - Breakthroughs In Inte...Builtio
Meeting and event planners work with many technology platforms that all promise to optimize their resources. But many of these tools only solve one problem and rarely integrate with other platforms. As a result, planners are often left to manage event data between systems manually, cancelling out any time-saving automation that was done in the first place.
Major obstacles have traditionally precluded planners from fully integrating their systems – time, money, access to expertise, complicated processes and lack of support from technology providers and IT departments. In this webinar, we'll walk you through how to connect all of your tools by yourself with a simple integration solution, an ‘integration Platform-as-a-Service’ (iPaaS). iPaaS solutions like Built.io Flow make it easier, more affordable, and faster to integrate, enabling planners to pursue opportunities to do so much more with their skills and talents.
Arne Rossmann outlines why the Business Data Lake works and which Services the Business Data Lake should provide. Organizations can use the Business Data Lake concept best when they standardize, industrialize and innovate.
Presented by Arne Rossman, Capgemini Germany, at the OOP Conference, 31 January 2017
BIG Data & Hadoop Applications in FinanceSkillspeed
Explore the applications of BIG Data & Hadoop in Finance via Skillspeed.
BIG Data & Hadoop in Finance is a key differentiator, especially in terms of generating greater investment insights. They are used by companies & professionals for risk assessment, fraud detection & forecasting trends in financial markets.
To get more details regarding BIG Data & Hadoop, please visit - www.SkillSpeed.com
BIG Data & Hadoop Applications in RetailSkillspeed
Explore the Applications of BIG Data & Hadoop in Retail Industry via Skillspeed.
BIG Data & Hadoop in Retail is a key differentiator, especially in terms of generating memorable customer experiences. They are used for brand sentiment analysis, consumer insights, optimizing store layouts and inventory-demand cycles.
To get more details regarding BIG Data & Hadoop, please visit - www.SkillSpeed.com
Connecta Event: Big Query och dataanalys med Google Cloud PlatformConnectaDigital
Avancerad dataanalys och ”big data” har under de senaste åren klättrat på trendlistorna och är nu ett av de mest prioriterade områdena i utvecklingen av nya tjänster och produkter för ledarföretag i det digitala landskapet.
Informationen som byggs upp i systemen när kundmötena digitaliseras har visat sig vara guld värt. Här finns allt vi behöver veta för att göra våra affärer mer effektiva.
Sedan sommaren 2013 har Connecta tillsammans med Google ett etablerat samarbete för att hjälpa våra kunder med övergången till moln-tjänster för bland annat avancerad dataanalys. För att göra oss själva redo att hjälpa våra kunder har vi under ett antal år utvecklat såväl kunskaper som skaffat oss erfarenheter kring Googles olika moln-produkter, som exempelvis ”Big Query”.
Big Query är ett molnbaserat analysverktyg och en del av Google Cloud Platform. Big Query gör det möjligt att ställa snabba frågor mot enorma dataset på bara någon sekund. Big Query och Google Cloud Platform erbjuder färdiga lösningar för att sätta upp och underhålla en infrastruktur som med enkla medel gör allt detta möjligt.
På Connecta Digital Consultings tredje event för våren introducerade vi våra kunder och partners i koncepten dataanalys och Big Query.
Under eventet berördes följande punkter:
- Big Data och Business Intelligence (BI)
- “The Google Big Data tools” – framgångsfaktorer och hur man kommer igång
- Google Cloud Platform och hur man genomför en framgångsrik molnsatsning
Vi presenterade case och berättade om viktiga lärdomar vi dragit i samarbetet med Google och våra kunder.
Watch full webinar here: https://bit.ly/3eEax0F
iOCO enables companies to overcome challenges, so they can engage in successful digital transformations, gain all of their expected benefits, and remain competitive in the face of digital disruption. Listen to this session to learn how iOCO facilitates digital transformations that accelerate time-to-market while improving agility.
Atmosphere Conference 2015: DevOps and the Need for SpeedPROIDEA
Speaker: Stephen Thair
Language: English
The #1 complaint application Product Owners have is that it takes the IT department too long to deliver new features and innovation. Organisations are embracing DevOps in order to try and address this “need for speed” and according to the 2014 State of DevOps Report “high-performing organizations are still deploying code 30 times more frequently, with 50 percent fewer failures than their lower-performing counterparts”. So why are these organisations leveraging DevOps practices to deliver better software, faster and how do they do it? What are the fundamental technical and organisational elements of a successful DevOps environment? How can we introduce these ideas into our own companies to kickstart our DevOps transformation?
Visit our website: http://atmosphere-conference.com/
Setting the Customer's Journey: Walk a Mile In Your Customer's ShoesAggregage
Product professionals use phrases like "voice of the customer," and "user experience" so often that it can be easy to lose sight of their actual meanings. This phrase blur is dangerous, as it can pull our attention from what should be our real focus: our our customers' and users' needs. How can we, as product professionals, learn to keep customers and users at the heart of our work?
Join Steven Haines, globally recognized thought leader and author, as he guides us through a memorable journey demonstrating how you can walk a mile in your customer's shoes. He'll explore how, by developing true empathy for your users, you can ensure you're creating the features and products they actually want.
The Coca-Cola Company: BPM in the Context of Global ERP (Enterprise Resource ...Software AG
Innovation World 2013 presentation
Get introduced to BPM in the context of ERP, implemented globally at Coca-Cola Bottling companies using SAP® and other solutions. Business process standardization and the implementation of best-practice processes are the company's key guiding principles. Topics covered in this presentation include an overview of the Coca-Cola System and the Bottler Services Group, the BPM life cycle for Coke One (process strategy, process design, process implementation and process controlling) and an assessment of where this initiative is headed next.
Speaker:
Petra Burgstaller
BPM & Enabling Lead, The Coca-Cola Company
Cynoteck for over a decade has been successfully delivering quality salesforce consulting services to organizations across the globe. We have delivered an array of customized salesforce services to our clients. From initial rollout of Salesforce to providing completely customized functionalities to building custom AppExchange applications, we have done it all.
Cynoteck continues to work with organizations as their Salesforce implementation and managed services partner along with offering end to end salesforce consulting, to ensure their Salesforce instance provides optimum business value. We feel proud of the fact that our solutions are helping our clients in their growth and meeting business goals.
We have an excellent delivery team and have immense experience in designing intuitive solutions using Salesforce customization features, namely, Apex, Visualforce, Lightning components framework and other latest features, to deliver a seamless user experience.
Feel free to reach us if you are looking for a salesforce consulting partner.
This document describes Progton, the software services company based out of Bangalore, India.
The slides explain about the journey from start and the projects that are delivered by Progton team, Along with the links to social media handles and contact details to reach out to the team.
This document brings together a set
of latest data points and publicly
available information relevant for
Telecommunication & Media
Industry. We are very excited to share
this content and believe that readers
will benefit from this periodic
publication immensely.
Horses & Unicorns: Britchamber july 2016Nigel Green
This story was first told to the British Chamber in Hong Kong in May 2016. It's about a real business that wishes to remain anonymous. It is just a short teaser that begs questions and much more discussion, but it did generate lively Q&A on the day.
Please visit the Horses & Unicorns blog: http://horsesunicorns.blogspot.co.uk/
Scaling Agile is not the Path to Business Agility - CIO EDGEInês Almeida
I spoke to Australia’s top technology leaders at Adapt's #CIOEDGE event challenging them to review the focus of their current Agile Transformation initiatives and take a design-led approach to Business Digital Transformation.
Similar to “The Digital Oilfield” : Using IoT to reduce costs in an era of decreasing oil prices - Powered by SAP S/4 HANA (20)
Techniques to optimize the pagerank algorithm usually fall in two categories. One is to try reducing the work per iteration, and the other is to try reducing the number of iterations. These goals are often at odds with one another. Skipping computation on vertices which have already converged has the potential to save iteration time. Skipping in-identical vertices, with the same in-links, helps reduce duplicate computations and thus could help reduce iteration time. Road networks often have chains which can be short-circuited before pagerank computation to improve performance. Final ranks of chain nodes can be easily calculated. This could reduce both the iteration time, and the number of iterations. If a graph has no dangling nodes, pagerank of each strongly connected component can be computed in topological order. This could help reduce the iteration time, no. of iterations, and also enable multi-iteration concurrency in pagerank computation. The combination of all of the above methods is the STICD algorithm. [sticd] For dynamic graphs, unchanged components whose ranks are unaffected can be skipped altogether.
As Europe's leading economic powerhouse and the fourth-largest hashtag#economy globally, Germany stands at the forefront of innovation and industrial might. Renowned for its precision engineering and high-tech sectors, Germany's economic structure is heavily supported by a robust service industry, accounting for approximately 68% of its GDP. This economic clout and strategic geopolitical stance position Germany as a focal point in the global cyber threat landscape.
In the face of escalating global tensions, particularly those emanating from geopolitical disputes with nations like hashtag#Russia and hashtag#China, hashtag#Germany has witnessed a significant uptick in targeted cyber operations. Our analysis indicates a marked increase in hashtag#cyberattack sophistication aimed at critical infrastructure and key industrial sectors. These attacks range from ransomware campaigns to hashtag#AdvancedPersistentThreats (hashtag#APTs), threatening national security and business integrity.
🔑 Key findings include:
🔍 Increased frequency and complexity of cyber threats.
🔍 Escalation of state-sponsored and criminally motivated cyber operations.
🔍 Active dark web exchanges of malicious tools and tactics.
Our comprehensive report delves into these challenges, using a blend of open-source and proprietary data collection techniques. By monitoring activity on critical networks and analyzing attack patterns, our team provides a detailed overview of the threats facing German entities.
This report aims to equip stakeholders across public and private sectors with the knowledge to enhance their defensive strategies, reduce exposure to cyber risks, and reinforce Germany's resilience against cyber threats.